Facts
For Sick
Women
First the medlolne thmt
holds the record for the
largest number of abso
lute Cures of female Ilia
Is Lydla E. Plnkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Second Mrs. Plnkham
oan show by her letter
tiles In Lynn that a mil
lion women have boon
restored to health by her
medlolne and advkte.
Third -All letters to Mrs.
Plnkham are received,
opened, read and an
swered by women only.
This fact Is certified to by
the mayor and postmas
ter of Lynn and others of
Mrs. Plnkham's own olty.
Write for free book con
taining these certificates.
Every ailing woman Is
Invited to write to Mrs.
Plnkham and get her ad
vice free of charge.
Lydla E. Pinkham Med Co., Lynn, Mas.
Private roof gardens are such a suc
cess in Sew York that the large board-ing-boases
find it necessary to adopt
them as a regular summer feature.
DOX'T GET FOOTSORE, GET FOOT
EASE, A powder. At this season your feet feel
swollen, nervous and uncomfortable. If
yon have smarting feet or tight shoes, try
Allen's Foot-Ease. Itrestsand coiiiforts;
makes walking easy. Cures swollen and
sweating feet, blisters and callous spots.
Believes corns and bunions of all pain and
is a certain cure for Chilblains, Sweating,
Pump or Frosted Feet. We bave over 30,
000 testimonials. Don't get footsore get
Foot-Ease. Try it today. Sold by all
druggists and shoe stores for 25c. Trial
package Fres. Address, Alien 8. Olm
sted, l.e Roy, N. Y.
The natives of Hawaii, be they ever
so poor, never steal or beg. These
offences are confined almost exclusive
ly to the Portuguese residents of the
island.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab
lets. All druggists refund the money
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's sig
nature is on each box. 25c.
Under rational treatment the average
yield of a bee bive in Palestine is 100
pounds.
HELP WANTED.
WANTED Men and women of good
character to represent established house
on salary; splendid opportunity Ad
dress F. O. Box 587, Portland, Oregon.
Farmers who keep common sheep and
depend upon wool, do not know how
specimens of some breeds may be made
to reach great weights. A 2-year-old
grade Lincoln wether in England was
slaughtered, its live weight being 434
pounds. The carcass weighed 804
pounds, the loose fat 34 pounds, the
sikn, blood and entrails 90 pounds and
the waste 6 pounds. Sheep weighing
300 pounds live weight are numerous
in this country.
The population of the Berlin suburb
Cbarlottenburg is in a curiously unsta
ble condition. Last year 44,718 of
the population of 174,550 left the city
and 53,744 from elsewhere took their
places.
CATARRH
Catarrh has l.ecome such a common
disease that a person entirely free from
this disgusting complaint is seldom met
with. It is customary to speak of Catarrh
as nothing more serious than a bad cold,
a simple inflammation of the nose and
throat. It is, in fact, a complicated and
very dangerous disease ; if not at first, it
very soon becomes so.
The blood is quickly contaminated by
the foul secretions, and the poison
through the general circulation is carried
to all parts of the system.
Salves, washes and sprays are unsatis
factory and disappointing, because they
do not reach the seat of the trouble. S.
6. S. does. It cleanses the blood of the
poison and eliminates from the system all
catarrhal secretions, and thus cures thor
oughly and permanently the worst cases.
Mr. p. H. McAllister, of Harrodsbm-g. Ky.,
writes: "Having been a terrible sufferer from
catarrn, ana oeing now
sound and well, the ques
tion often put to me is,
What cured you?' In an
swer I feel it my duty to
state that Swift's Specific
Is the medicine. I am
such a true believer in the
efficacy of Swift's Specific
that I can houestly and
conscientiously re c o m -mend
it to any one suffer-
ing from Catarrh. Have
recommended ittomanv.
and am happy t - say that
those whom I' have induc
ed to use it can bear me out In the statement that
it will cure any case of Catarrh if taken Accord
ing to directions."
ps& 4b s the only purely veg-
etable blood purifier
Bk known. and the greatest
kHjof ail blood medicines
SbW maw Sw and tonics.
If you have Catarrh don't wait .until it
becomes deep-seated and chronic, but be
gin at once the use of S. S. S. , and send
for our book on blood and skin diseases
and write our physicians about your case.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, 8JL
MtSZ SEND HO MONEY
WW 1 Until you htv seen and vetted oar watch.
3 &n33t3 We sel1 at rctr7 PrtM? One-Half and
k fr?pg?y leas than what you hv to pay elMwhera.
"3 Our watch are fitted with the unequalled
f 1M im. 17 Jeweled Special Limited, or 7 jewel
J&m&&mmm Wallhaaa or Klyln XoTemcot, known
afB"Hk the world over as the beat, and
WARRANTED 20 r i ARS
Case it hunting solid gold pattern
er.zr.iv ing-, extra 14 karat gold
. plate: good eroueh for a railroad
I present. Special Offer tor the
I seat 60 daya: Send your address
'and we will send watch C. O. D.
1 with privilege of full examina
tion. Call in any expert and tf
f.iund narfartlv a.itiaf artofT and
' the best watch ever offered for such
a price pay 95.75 and express eharf
otherwise not one cent FREE
fj -1. OO chain for next 90 dan with every
State If Ladies or Gents watch is wanted. Write at once as
re nay not advertise this watch at this price again. Catalogne free.
Eralaor Watch Co.. S47 CtrsUBjilcBldf.CaicM
.nam WHFRf All f LSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I
in time. Sold br drosaists.
AT THE FARMHOUSE.
November trees are brown and bare
And brief and chill November days.
But on the farm all are astir
And cheerfully the mother says
"The day to all New England dear
Thanksgiving Day, will soon be here.
"So, father, choose the turkey now
And I will make some pnmpkln pies.
And we will have a pudding nice
And it shall be of largest size;
There are walnuts In the garret
And there is corn that pops like snow,
There are apples In the cellar
Which all the children love, I know.
"And we will have onr sons come home.
Our daughters and grandchildren, too,
Mary Ann and Jim and Joseph,
Maggie, Nellie and baby Prue."
So father gets the tnrkey fine
And mother makes the pumpkin pies
And home Thanksgiving morning brings
Beloved ones of every size..
The old house rings with their glad langh,
The fireplace glows with ruddy light.
And when at table all have met
That kitchen is a pleasant sight.
The father offers sincere thangs,
The little ones Impatient wait,
And then the tnrkey plump he carves
And from the bounty fills each plate.
Then grandma's plum-Ailed pudding comes
With mince and pnmpkln pies galore,
While nuts and apples, raisins sweet.
And fun and feasting crown the hour.
And here the poor remembered are
- And not In kindly word alone.
With well-filled hands the children speed
To neighbors' homes where want Is known.
The pleasant hours most swiftly fly.
The corn is popped and stilled the fnn.
And happy children rest In bed.
The glad November day Is done.
But by the fire grandmother sits
And in her hand she holds a eurl,
A soft brown curl, that shone long since
Around the face of her first girl
"Dear child," she cries, "forgotten never,
A mother's love remembers ever."
-Emily Pearson Bailey.
5 A RURAL PEACEMAKER.
;
X TtV T T 14 i R ROTTR .
v a-a j. a mi
We
fS3 HEY did not pay much attention
Ilto Thanksgiving in the country
i school district in which I taught in
the West a good many years ago. Christ
mas was the chief holiday of the winter,
and it was celebrated without any special
demonstration, for most of the people
were poor and there was not much senti
ment in their general make-up. Old Han
nah Dorton, with whom I boarded, was
of New England birth, and she had not
come to the West until some years after
her marriage. She was a woman of a
good deal of force of character, and no
one in the neighborhood had a nimbler
tongue. One evening about two weeks
before Thanksgiving I said to her:
"Do the people observe Thanksgiving
very generally in thisjieighborhood?"
"No, they do not," replied the old lady
with considerable emphasis. "And it has
always been a good deal of a trial to me
that so little attention was paid to a day
that we made so much of back there in
dear old New England. It was the great
est holiday of the year to us, and how
we did enjoy it!"
"Why do they pay so little attention to
it here?"
-"Well, I guess it is just because they
have never got in the way of paying any
attention to it. They never celebrated
the Fourth of July as it ought to be cele
brated until my husband got them started
to doing it ten years before he died, and
now we have a big celebration every
year."
"Some one ought to start them to cele
brating Thanksgiving."
"So they ought. But who is to do it?"
r reflected for a few moments, and then
I said:
"Suppose we start them off in that di
rection." "How?" asked the old lady, dropping
her knitting into her lap and manifesting
eager interest,
"Suppose we get up a Thanksgiving
dinner in the school house. Invite all
the folks in the district to come and bring
their dinner with them. There "does not
seem to be any social life in- the neigh
borhood unless one can call occasional
spelling matches and singing schools in
the school house social diversions. The
people never eat and drink together in a
merry-making of any kind. Don't you
think that the idea of a Thanksgiving
dinner in the school house would take?"
The old lady reflected for a moment
and then said:
"Yes, I think it would. It would be a
novelty to every one, and I think the
folks would turn out big, only only "
"Only what?" I asked.
"Well, the fact is, there are so many
folks in this neighborhood that don't
speak to each other. I never saw any
thing like it. There is old Squire Bent,
who won't speak to his daughter because
she married John Watters against the
squire's wishes. There was nothing
against John, excepting that he was
poor, and he had a brother that had been
in jail, but John couldn't help that, and
he has done splendidly ever since he mar
ried, and it is my opinion that the squire
would like to make up with John and
Nellie, only he is too proud to make any
advances, and they won't either. Then
there is Kate Whiting and her sister,
Lucy Patch, who had a falling out years
ago; and ain't spoke to each other since,
and before that one was the very shadder
of the other. Reuben Hoopes and his
brother Silas and their families fell out
over the property after old man Hoopes
died, and they ain't ever spoke since.
Then the Anderson and Kobey families
had a falling out five years ago, and they
don't speak, and before that they were
as thick as flies around a molasses bar'l.
Tnen there are other families in the dis
trict that ain't as friendly as they ought
to be, so your Thanksgiving dinner might
end in a riot if all these people come to
gether in the school house."
"Not with a woman of your tact at the
head of it," I said.
"Well, you go ahead and get it up, and
I will aid and abet you all I can. I t will
be a break in the monotony of things
here even if there is a fight."
I spent all of my time before and after
school during the next ten days in call
ing at all of the homes in the neighbor
hood, and inviting the people to come to
the school house on Thanksgiving day
with well-filled baskets. The school
house was unusually large, and there
would be room for all if we took out a
part of the seats. Three days before
Thanksgiving old Mrs. Dorton said:
"I guess you'll have the house full
Thanksgiving. Nancy Ross was in here
to-day, and she says that the whole dis
trict is coming, and Nancy knows if any
one does, for she spends most of her time
trotting about picking up gossip and re
tailing it out aagin. She is as good as
the local columns of a newspaper for giv
ing news about what folks are saying
and doing, and she says that the idea of
the Thanksgiving dinner in the school
house was caught like wildfire. Nancy
says she wouldn't miss it for" a party."
The larger boys and girls of the school
met me at the school house the evening
before Thanksgiving, and we decorated
the room beautifully with evergreens and
WE WIIX NOW SING
several flags we had been able to borrow.
Provision had been made for two long
tables to run almost the entire length of
the room with some smaller tables in the
corners.
"I suppose that we will have to be
careful how we seat the people at the ta
bles," I said to Mrs. Dorton.
"You just leave that mostly to me,"
said the old lady. "I know the people
better than you do, and I won't be so apt
to make awkward blunders. I'll set 'em
down all right."
Nancy Ross was right when she said
that the whole district would be present
at the dinner. The dinner was to be at
1 o'clock, and by noon the house was fill
ed by a merry, happy crowd, including al
most every family in the district.
There were baskets and boxes and
even tubfuls of turkeys and chickens and
doughnuts and pies and cakes. There
were baskets of big red apples, and Hi
ram Hawkins brought half a barrel of
sweet cider. Some one brought a bas
ket of popcorn balls for the children, and
there was an infinite variety of jellies
and jams and preserves and pickles
brought forth from boxs and baskets.
"There's enough stuff here to feed an
army," said Hannah Dorton, as she bus
tled about from table to table, the happi
est and most active person in the house.
A few minutes before 1 o'clock I heard
her saying to Mrs. Kate Whiting, "Come,
now, Kate; yon and your husband and
two children are to set at this table over
in this corner. Come right along." Ani
when they were seated the old lady bus
tled up to Mrs. Patch and said:
"Now, Lucy, you and your husband
and the children are to sit here at this
table."
"And if she didn't plump them right
down with the Whitings that they hadn't
spoken to for years," said the voluble
Nancy Ross afterward. Indeed Nancy
was so fond of telling about that
Thanksgiving dinner afterward that I
think I will let her tell about it now.
"Then," she said, "if that Hanner Dor
ton didn't set old Squire Bent down at
the head of one table with his daughter
Nellie at his right hand and his son-in-law,
John Watters, at his left, an' their
baby in a high chair at its gran'pa's side,
an' it wa'n't three minutes before the old
Squire had that baby in his arms and
he et his whole dinner with the little
thing in his lap. I heard his daughter
say" to him, 'Shan't I take the baby,
father, so that you can eat your dinner
in greater comfort?' But he held right
on to it, and there he sat talkin' to Nellie
and John same as if there'd never been
any trouble at all. And he bad that baby
in his arms the whole afternoon, an'
went around as proud, sayin' to folks,
'See my grandson. Ain't he a mighty
fine boy?' It .was the first time he had
ever see'n the child, an' the next week he
made Nellie and John come and live with
him. Then what did that Hanner Dor
ton do but put Reuben Hoopes an' his
brother Silas and their families at a table
by themselves? an' I heard her say to
'em. 'Come, now, you folks want to be
sociable an' have a good visit together
same as own brothers ought to on
Thanksgivin' day.' Their wives have al-'
ways wanted to make up, an' I tell you
they found their tongues mighty soon,
an' 'fore that meal was over they was
talkin' away as if there had never been
any row over property or anything else.
An' before they knew it the Anderson
and Robey families found themselves at
the same table with Hanner sayin' to
'em, 'Now it don't make no difference
about the past. This is Thanksgivin'
day. an a good time to forget that there
has ever been anything but a happy past
between you folks.'
"Then if she didn't up an' set old Ruth
Xorse an' old Betty Underwood down
side by side, an' they hadn't spoke to
each other "for years, an' before they
knowed it them two old bodies was chat
tin' away together as if they had never
had a fallin' out in the world. Then
when she had got all the people that were
enemies set down side by side she seated
every one else, and then she said,
"'We. will now sing.'
' "Blest be the tie that binds." '
An' ev'rybody sung it, an' then Elder
Sharpe asked a blessin' an' the dinner
was begun. There never was such a
spread seen before in these parts, an'
you never would have thought to have
seen them people eatin' an' langhin' an'
merrymakin' together that there was
such a thing in the world as malice or
envy or bitterness or ill-will or anything
o' the sort, no you wouldn't. After the
dinner we had games an' sung songs" an'
made speeches, an' from that time on
there was more peace an' happiness an'
sociability in the neighborhood than there
ever was before. I tell you we'd good
reason to stand np as we did before we
started for home an' sing
" 'Praise God from whom all blessings
flow.' "
Cause fbr Anxiety
"What are you crying about, little
girl?"
"Boo-hoo, 'oos sittin' on my Jam tart!"
. A Programme.
Thanksgiving comes In glad array,
The poet's Jocund text.
With turkey and mince pie oae day
And biliousness the next.
-Washington star.
a - - .,
Sandwiches that are to be served at
an afternoon tea should not be spread
with butter or the filling mixture quite
to the edge of the bread. This little
precaution will prevent their soiling
the gloves of those who hold them.
The Oldest Banknote . .
Is in the possession of the Bank of Eng
land. It is dated December 19, 1699, and is
for 555, but on account of its age same is
made very valuable. One of the oldest
and most valuable stomach medicines is
Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. For fifty
years it has cured dyspepsia, indigestion,
nervousness or insomnia. It will cure
when faithfully taken.
At a street fair in Wichita this fall,
one of the chief features will be an
arnh 40 fane hiuh nnnatfonbul SjmtirAlv
I e - J
01 appies.
SlOO REWARD SIOO. .
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
jearn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure
is the only positive cure known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis
ease, requires a constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system, thereby destroying the founda
tion of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work. The pro
prietors have so much faith in its curative
powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars
lor any case that it fails to cure. Send for list
of testimonials. Address
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hall's Famili- Pills are the best-
An Egyptian contemporary says:
"Onr whole island is now girdled with
golf courses. All the world is no
longer a stage, bnt golf links."
This signature is on every box of the genuine
Laxative BromoQuinine Tablet.
the remedy that cure a cold im one day
Rural mail delivery is progressing in
a way to satisty both the people and
the department. In Carroll county,
Maryland, every farm house now has a
daily free mail delivery.
TOO KNOW WHAT YOU ARK TAKING
When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill
Tonio because the formula is plainly
printed on every bottle showing that it
is simply Iron and Quinine in a taste
less form. No Cure, No Pay. 50c.
Ceilings that have been smoked with
a kerosene lamp should be washed off
with soda water.
MISS FLETCHER'S SUCCESS.
The Daughter of a Former Governor of
South Dakota Attains an
Enviable Position.
From the Oregon Independent, Salem, Ore.
The daughter of Hon. J. H. Fletober,
formerly governor of South Dakota, Dot
now a resident of Salem, Oregon, has
lately attained an enviable position.
Her success is remarkable, especially
when the fact is known that for some
time it was feared ber career wonld be
shortened because of ill health.
Ex-Governor Fletcher in speaking of
the happy event in his daughter's life
said:
"For over two years my daughter
had been declining from a strong,
healthy, rosy-cheeked person to a pale,
weakly and helpless eirl. She was
afflicted with terrible headaches, and
apparently grew weaker and more lan
guid, and apparently without cause.
We became greatly alarmed and feared
that her days were already numbered.
"I tried several doctors, one after
the other, but all without avail. Fin
ally, to please a friend, I bought a box
of Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale
People, and to our surprise, before it
was used her headaches ceased, the
color began to return to her cheeks and
lips and her strength began to assert
itself.
' 'I bought five boxes more and by
the time she had finished them she was
completely restored to her health, and
today our hearts are gladdened with
the society of a robust, rosy and
healthy girl instead of a pale, tired and
sickly one. In her case the transfor
mation was rapid and wonderfnl, and
I can never speak too highly of the
splendid merits of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills."
No discovery of modern times has
proved such a boon to women as Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People.
Acting directly on the blood and
nerves, invigorating the body, regulat
ing the functions, they restore the
strength and health to the exhausted
woman when, every effort of the phjsi
cian proves unavailing.
For the growing girl they are of the
utmost benefit, for the mother indis
pensable, for every woman invaluable.
Everywhere Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for Pale People are recognized as a
specific for diseases of the blood and
nerves. For paralysis, locomotor atax
ia, and other diseases long supposed
incurable, they have proved their effi
cacy in thousands of oases. They are
one of the greatest blessings ever be
stowed upon mankind.
This remedy is sold by druggists
generally, or will be sent, postpaid, bv
! the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Sche
nectady, N. Y., on receipt of price, 60
cents per oox, six boxes for $2.50.
Daring the present century 400 ha
man lives, $125,000,000 and 200 ships
have been lost in finitless efforts to
find the North Pole.
1 Beware of Them
V There are two afflictions which
V perhaps give the most pais g
g and trouble, viz: f
I Sciatica 1
I Lumbago
Both disable and cripple, X
g but S
I St Jacobs Oil
X is their beat cure. S
Chinese tike Americans Best.
Up to the beginning of the present
troubles, it has been somewhat remark
able fact, aocording to the Philadel
phia Inquirer, that no American citi
zen, traveler, business man, diplomat
or missionary, has ever been murdered
in China by the Chinese. This can be
said of the citizens of none of the other
great powers which bave had constant
and -long-continued intercourse with
the East. This, it is said, is not a
mere coincidence, or accident. - The
.Chinese like Americans. Of course,
the statement is made with the reser
vation that they do not like any for
eigners as a resident of China, bnt as
compared with the people of the great
European powers, they like the Ameri
cans. Whenever they ask a man of
what nationality he is, and his answer
is that he is an American, they at onoe
exclaim, "We are friends."
Steers are preferred in this country
for beef, but in England the butchers
pay one cent per pound more for heif
ers, as they give less bone and more
choice cuts. A well-bred heifer, how
ever, is worth more for the dairy than
for beef. No heifers should be kept
when calves unless from patents that
are known to possess merit.
Make Tour Liver Lively.
A lazy, languid liver keeps von in bad health
all the time. Wake it np to lively action with
Cascarets Candy Cathartic. All druggists, 10c,
25c, 50c.
Meat has been preserved in a frozen
state for 30 years, and found perfectly
eatable at the end of that time.
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Sooth
ing Syrup the best remedy to use for their
children during the teething period.
Before the next tourist season opens
the Swiss railway from Spiez to Fouti
gen will be completed.
The Best Prescription for Malaria
Chilis and Fever is a bottle of Groves.
Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply
iron and quinine in a tasteless form,
No Core. No Pay. Price 0o.
When a man is lost to all shame, a
club or a rawhide is the only argument
left.
Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infal
lible medicine for coughs and colds. N.
W. Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17,
1900.
In China a doctor's fee varies from
8 cents to a quarter.
RHEUMATISM, SCIATICA, immediate
ly relieved; positively enred by "Rheumatol."
Prepared only by the Rheumatol Co., 368 W.
11th St., Sew York.
The waste from the hay mow makes
excellent litter for chickens. The
seeds of all kinds of grass when dry
are relished oy fowls, and when the
waste from the mow is thrown on the
floor of the poultry house the fowls
will industriously woik in the litter
and find much to consume.
(The Famous German Wood Preserver)
mm A VENARIUS CARBOUNEUMm.
....Permanently Destroys..
..CHICKEN LICE AND VERMIN..
One application is all that
your dealer cannot supply you, write for circulars and information to the
following- distributing agents: Perfection Pile Preserving Co., Seattle.
"Wash.; Fisher, Thorsen & Co, Portland, Oregon.; Whittier, Coburn &
Go., San Francisco, Cal.
DOU YOU WANT YOUR SON EDUCATED FOR A BUSINESS LIFE?
YAMHILL AND ELKVINTH STKKETS, PORTLAND, OREGON.
Write us. Send for our New Illustrated Catalogue.
&Tha Only Sure Care and
Instantaneous Relief for
RHEUMATISM
SCIATICA, NKCKAUilA, XKKVOUS
NESS. DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE, CA
TARKH, CUOIIP, BRONCHITIS, LA
GRIPPE, MALARIA, HEART WEAK
NESS' CREEPING NUMBNESS, etc. Buy
a bottle today and have It In the house. It will
save suffering and doctor's bills. Harmless for
children's use. Contains no opiates or other harm
ful inrre-Uents. Absolutely pure aud concentrated.
Large bottle of 300 doses for 1 1, prepaid by mail or
express, or we will send you (postpaid) a trial
bottle for 25 cents. Agents wanted.
SBUSM RHEUMATIC CUE CQIPUT. 164 lake St, Chicago, III.
A
iN AMERICAN WATCH
Whm handsomM U K. doabl roldplatad watch ever offered
IXCfe QC Beautifully engraved, huntiii)
I S7 3J or open face, fitted with age
El
niiiMinvnii
MOVEMENT
, hiitattaa, fall
Htweled, nickel tin
ih. propei It ron
Uted and adjusted.
traiekt ain and withal
modern improvements in
fact one of the finest made.
sssss"sW with proper care will iti
SaSSSC! 20 YEAR GUARANTEE..?
poaraneeeoaalto ear $40 solid (old watrh. SentC.O P. for .W
ind expresschargt s, with privilege of Kit EE XXaBIHATIOK. If
pot satisfactory , can be returned at oar expense, mm, mm mm mm
An elettent Ooldplated Chain worth One Dollar, r n t IL.
If $3.05 ia sent with order. Where no Express OSe $3.95 must
be sent with order and goods will be shipped by registered
snail. Write whether Gents or Indies. Jewelry Catalogue free,
People's Jewelry Co., Dept.33 Safe Bltfg, CHICAGO.
Are You Deaf 79
AH easas of DEAFNESS or HARD-HEARING
are now CURABLE by oar nw Invention: only those born
dUfWincarable: HEAD S0ISC8 CE4SK ISSKDIITJLT.
Describe roar case. Examination and adTios tree.
Ton oan cure yourself at home at a nominal cost.
M.r.sfi.s.l tnr.l CWni '?!" A-
luroi aauivaai auiai vuuiv. imm.ii
FINE OLD
...WHISKY...
Gin, Brandy, Rum
12 full anarts. 9.00. Per gallon, J2.50. XXX
PORT AND SHERRY. $1.50.
ALL GOOD GOODS
Orders for 125.00 and apwarddelivered free to
nearest Railroad or Steamer Landing. Blank
Cases and Kegs.
LOUIS CAHEN & SON
Established 30 Years.
BAR FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.
P. LlQJwLY
10 OAW TBEATMEKT FREE, r
Have made Dropsy and its com.
T'M:rfc
SUOveSB, B.TVVUWSWJ
sad oases.
SZ.O.O. ana-B wu,
Box V. Atlanta, &,
wit. - ,wr
WW
Every Exertion a Task
Every Care a Burden
There is failure of the strength
to do and the power to endure;
there is weakness "all over" that is
persistent and constant.
The vital functions are impaired,
food does not nourish, and the
whole system is run down.
A medicine that strengthens the
stomach, perfects digestion, invig
orates and tones is needed.
What Hood's Sarsaparilla did for Mrs
L. B. Garland, Shady, Temi., it has done
for others. She took it when she was all
run down without appetite, losing ilesh,
and unable to do her work. It restored
her appetite, increased her weight, and
made her well and strong. This is her
own unsolicited statement.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Promises to cure and keeps the
promise. The earlier tteatment in
begun the better bgin it today.
A fruit tree propagator has produced
a seedless apple. These new apples
are sn prior in flavor to the ordinary
kinds. High prices are being paid for
the trees.
Stops the Cough and
Works Off the Gold.
Laxative Bro-no-Quinine Tablets curs
a cold in one day. No cure, No Pay.
Price 25 cents.
One Chicago man has escaped jury
serivce on the plea that he is preju
diced against the city. But then some
men will say almost anything to es
cape jury duty.
PILES
"I suffered the tortures of (lie damned
with protruding piles brought on by constipa
tion with which I was afflicted tor twenty
years. I ran across your CASCARETS in the
town of Newell. Ia, and never found any thin
to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from
piles and teel like a new man. "
C H. Kbits, 1411 Jones St., Sioux City, la.
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. Sc. We.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Ulnar tt.m.d tmjftr, Chlea, Ma.tr.!. K.w T.rk. S19
U n Til Df Sold ami guaranteed by all drng-
IIU-IU-BAU Bwttn ITRETohnrrn Habit
is required. It lasts for years. If
9
If You Need a
SAW MILL, ENGINE
ROIl PD or aiiv piece of Machinery, it
-'-' 1I--,v will pay to write us for cata
logue and prices.
RUSSELL A OO., Portland, Or.
NOTHING BETTER MADE
Yon can't make a mistake ft ? oti get
..Mitchell..
Hitehell, Itemis & Staver Co.
PORTLAND. ORECON.
DR. GUNN'Suver PILLS
ONE FOR'A DOSE. Core Sick Headache and Dvs-
pepsla, amors Pimples, Purify the Blood, Aid Vlgea-tlon.PreventlilllouBnea-
Do not Gripe or Sicken. To
convince iy!li mal i samp efree;fullbox.25c DR.
BCSAtikO CO., FUlasdaUa, ra. Sold by Drogglsts.
JQfti; POOLE, Portland, Oregon.
can give yon the best bargains in general
B4cmnery, engines, boilers, tanks, pumps,
plows, belts and windmills. The new
steel I X li windmill, sold by him, is un
fequalled. .
IF,
.".h PENSION
BICKFURn. Washington. D. C . they re
4
ceive qnick replies. B. 5th N. H. Vols. StaS
20th Corps. Prosecuting claims since 1878.
OUTLER'S CU80UTE if IODINE
A gUBI.anteed Cure for Catarrh and
Consumption, fl.00. D Lock Box 145.
W. H. SMITH & CO., luffalo, .Y , Pi op's.
K. P. N. V.
So. 47 IttUO.
17HKN writing: to advertisers pleas
iff mention this paper.
S7rS CAN DY
M" mW CATHARTIC
kw TKAOt MA BlOrSTtlXO